Tax liens and retirement plans
Most pension plans and retirement savings are exempt from the claims of creditors, except for Uncle Sam!
Tax liens do attach to IRA's, 401 K's, and pension plans, and,
liens generally pass through bankruptcy
unaffected.
Thus, while a bankruptcy may discharge your personal liability and
protect assets that you acquire after the bankruptcy, any prepetition
tax lien survives as a charge on assets owned at the time of the filing. These tax liens, if not released, can cause a huge upset in your retirement
budget if the IRS tries to enforce the lien when the retirement plan is in pay status.
When considering whether to seek a formal release of a tax lien
for which the personal liability has been discharged in bankruptcy, consider whether you
have any form of retirement savings that might be subject to that lien if not released.
Our experience has been that the IRS does not have a system in
place to distinguish bankruptcy cases where it might have a valid tax lien on a non
obvious asset, like a 401K, and at present does not appear to be
routinely monitoring or renewing these liens after a bankruptcy discharge. But this could change.
If this
fact pattern describes your situation, get experienced bankruptcy counsel.